In the year she and her boyfriend have lived in the town of Victor, Nancy Sung Shelton says not a month has gone by without some interaction with law enforcement. They are black; the town is 95 percent white.

The most recent incident, she said, came early Wednesday morning. She was asleep and her boyfriend, Derek McNeil, was coming home late, driving her car, returning from working with some friends to repair his truck. It was 1:30 a.m. and he needed to be awake by 5 a.m. for his job in construction.

As he approached their house he was pulled over by deputies from the Ontario County Sheriff's Office, according to Sung Shelton. In his driveway they put him through multiple sobriety tests — six, by his count, all of which confirmed he had not been drinking — and made him kneel in the gravel while they searched the car for drugs, threatening him in the meantime with jail.

The car belongs to Sung Shelton, and she wrote in a Facebook post that McNeil repeatedly asked the four deputies to knock on the door and wake her up so she could provide her registration and insurance cards. They declined to do so, she said, and instead issued him tickets for an unregistered vehicle and lack of insurance and removed his license plates.

"I talk about implicit bias and stereotyping and racism as a business, so I’m hyper-vigilant," she said. "It was unfortunate for the officers they happened to engage with me, because I know what I’m talking about.”

She texted her insurance and registration information to the sergeant and he rescinded the tickets and sent two deputies to her house to return the plates.

"This circumstance is not a unique one," she wrote on Facebook. "My heart was pained ... that Victor, a very white community, will accept the dollars we spend at their mall, but want us to shop and then LEAVE. This community does not want us to live here."

Sung Shelton said she and McNeil have had the police called on them on several occasions and once were followed home by a group of white teenagers. When she called the Sheriff's Office to report it, she said, the attitude of the response was dismissive.

On Wednesday morning, Ontario County Undersheriff David Tillman said he was not aware of the incident from earlier that morning but would look at the Facebook post "in order to start an internal investigation and ... reach out to Ms. Shelton for further comment."

Sung Shelton said she intended to file a formal complaint with the Sheriff's Office. She wants an apology and for deputies to receive racial bias training.

Tillman said that every officer already does receive anti-bias training.

“I think they think they’ve satisfied my complaints by returning my tags, but they haven’t — we get harassed all the time," Sung Shelton said. "I hear all the time in my work in those communities — we’re all the same, we don’t have to worry about (bias). And that’s not true.

"There’s no wall around Victor that keeps all the black people out, and they need to be ready and respectful to deal with that."